Monday, December 26, 2011

6/9/2010 workout with hilarious fails

Some snatch fails were 145lbs to 165lbs. Rubber mats are comin in two days. My Clean & Jerk form is becoming more memorized and solid. Paulo's form is really getting there but remember he is much more outta shape than me atm. He's a little rusty for now but as soon as the rubber mats come in, he'll be ready to train more consistently and eventually improve his form. But man that was funny, he didn't make any of those lifts today and kept raising the weight.

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Thursday, December 15, 2011

Force USA F-FID Flat to Incline and Decline Bench

Get a full-body workout with the toughest Flat to Incline/Decline Bench avaliable! TheForce USA Flat to Incline/Decline Bench (F-FID) is heavy duty and fully adjustable to give you a solid workout! The Force USA FID bench is made to take as much as you can give it and is the ultimate bench for a complete free-weight workout! Solid, compact and effective, the Force USA Flat to Incline/Decline Bench is strong enough for gym use, while designed to fit into any home. Featuring SteelForce Structural Integrity and heavy-duty, DuraCore™ high density foam padding wrapped in sewn rip-stop VorTex™ Upholstery, the Force USA Flat to Incline/Decline Bench is built to take a pounding. And, with an Class A rating, the Force USA Flat to Incline/Decline Bench comes with a Lifetime Structural Warranty. The Force USA Flat to Incline/Decline Bench is unmatched in its class and will give you solid and intense workouts for many years to come! The Force USA Flat to Incline/Decline Bench is a solid unit and provides free weight exercises to build a rock solid body! The back rest features two piece DuraCore™ high density foam which is extremely comfortable and will not bottom out during your workout, along with fully adjustable back rest you can workout in flat to incline (90 degrees) and decline positions which will help give you many exercise positions for rock solid results! Combine with a power rack, smith machine or squat racks for the ultimate workout! Product Specifications * Assembled ...

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Sunday, December 11, 2011

Basketball - Improve Free-throw Shooting Touch With a Deflated Ball

!±8± Basketball - Improve Free-throw Shooting Touch With a Deflated Ball

You've all heard the expression, "great touch", referring to a player who made a basket with several bounces on the rim or some such analogy. It's really a sarcastic remark, because the insinuation is that the shooter planned it that way, but it was really a lucky shot or a series of lucky bounces etc. I want to elaborate on "shooting touch" and possibly shed some new light on this aspect of shooting. You may know by now that I don't give much credence to the importance of the feet in shooting other than the 6" bend at the knees and the feet should be shoulderwidth apart. I also don't think there is a huge factor in whether the dominant foot is slightly forward of the other or perfectly square or directly under the shoulders.

We have all known that since before the era of the "Peach basket". Ever since I have been doing shooting clinics, I can't recall anybody ever telling me that the last thing they think about as the ball is released from their shooting hand, is which part of the hand dominates the touch and feel of the ball. By this I mean, that players are just not cognizant of the importance of the finger correlation to the ball release. Of course, I would say most players are completely unconscious of the hand placement or grip alignment on the ball. I am referring specifically to the free throw here where a player has the time to do so but when you watch players on TV take their bounces or their so called pre-shot repertoire or routine prior to a free throw, you will be amazed how few players even watch the ball and ensure correct hand alignment on the ball before they shoot. Go ahead I challenge you to watch and see if I am right. Anyhow, this is real important. This is when it gets into the nitty gritty.

Since I just don't believe that you can rely on the natural human makeup to be a great shooter, I feel that our natural makeup is not perfect enough when it comes to shooting a basketball or engineering accuracy.  As a human entity we are created perfect, but when it involves external activities it all becomes subjective.  We need the help of scientific criteria and physics to help the imperfect anatomical structure.  The reason I know this is because I fit into this box myself. No matter how hard I tried to be a great shooter in my early days I never could achieve the efficiency numbers that I do in my later life because I have learned to shoot mentally and physically and not just physically.

The shot begins cerebrally. It is a matter of mind over matter. Process over product. Beginning before the end. Alpha before omega. You get the picture. It is a fact that a high percentage of players think of making the shot rather than concentrating on the ever so important mechanics at the moment of release. Now here is where the rubber meets the road. When we shoot the regular inflated ball ask yourself what you do at the moment of release. Why do you think most other players are any different. They are not. As a whole we have not been trained from the shooter's perspective. We have been trained from the coach's perspective. And how many coaches out there were shooters in college, or let me re-phrase that. How many were great shooters in college or the Pro ranks. Not very many. You see the gap we have to contend with.

You will notice how much time I spend on isolating individual fingers and their involvement in the shooting process. Well, I know that when I start teaching my methods and secrets a lot of players have a hard time making this adjustment of transferring their thinking process from the basket to themselves. It's a total reversal from what they are used to. Some make an easy transition, but with others it takes longer and that's understandable. One of the key factors, if not the main factor involved in shooting is to shoot the shot straight. And what guarantees the shot to go straight? The index finger does.

There is a definitely different feeling from shooting a flat ball and a fully inflated ball. It is hard to explain. You just need to try it. If you are a player that has a hard time connecting a feeling from the brain to the ball through the finger tips then you need to try to shoot with a flat ball. Here is the sensation that you will feel, or you should feel. It is a natural tendency that when one shoots a ball, that the shooting wrist has a tendency to flail or at least to sway sideways. It is the weight of the middle finger and the ring finger combined that generally cause the sway. By shooting a flat ball you will feel the indentation more pronounced than with an inflated ball. The extra time it takes for the indentation to occur will relay to your conscious brain which finger is applying how much pressure to what part of the ball. This has to be understood, felt and corrected. Ideally, the ball needs to have even energy generated from the tip of the index finger down thru to the wide base of the pinky finger and the wide thumb. This wide base must remain this way from the beginning to the end of the shot. All the while being cognizant of those 2 dreaded fingers (ring finger and the middle finger), so as not to let them dominate the direction of the ball.

You almost have to see this whole process in your mind and actually get it into the subconscious before you can actually make it work in your favor. This is a case where you really have to get in tune with the super fine muscles. If you can feel your capillaries in the tips of your fingers then you are on the right track. Great shooting really is a case of fine muscle domination and not large muscle control. Not only do you want to feel or control the energy generated to the ball but you have to know how much input to the ball that each finger delivers. The amount of force generated by each finger needs to be accountable and measurable.

Knowing this gives you the real knowledge and feedback you need to repeat or change the next shot. Because that is all there is. THE NEXT SHOT. It is all about how well you get control of your physical faculties through total mental knowledge and understanding. Shooting is not just throwing the ball up in the direction of the basket and hoping for the best. You can control the destiny of each shot as you pull the trigger because you have actually calculated distances and direction because you now have a perfect knowledge of these mechanical and scientific principles.

The percentages you should feel are 90% on the index finger, almost zero on the mid finger and pinky finger and about 5% on the thumb pad and pinky pad. Just to give you an idea about incorrect finger placement, I attended the 2009 NBA All-star weekend and in the Jam Session where everyone gets to have hoop-la fun. There was a booth called "Get-a-grip" and there was a display of a giant basketball with a hand on it. Down below there was about a dozen balls with pro players hands embossed on the balls where people could match their hands with the grip on the balls. Well the bad thing here is that every ball and every grip had the mid finger in the center of the ball. My beef with this is that it promotes irregular follow throughs. The strongest part of the hand is the index finger when it is aligned with the inside of the forearm which forms an imaginary ruler or gun barrel.


Basketball - Improve Free-throw Shooting Touch With a Deflated Ball

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Body Solid OSR500S Rubber Grip Olympic Set With Chrome Bar

!±8±Body Solid OSR500S Rubber Grip Olympic Set With Chrome Bar

Brand : Body Solid
Rate :
Price : $749.00
Post Date : Dec 08, 2011 00:15:48
Usually ships in 2-3 business days



Body Solid Rubber Grip Olympic Sets. Designed using state-of-the art technology, Body-Solid Rubber Grip Olympic Plates surpasses all others in quality, accuracy, reliability and price. Quad-grip design guarantees safer and easier performance than any other plate on the market. Encased in durable, heavy-duty rubber to prevent scuffing or damage to equipment, walls or floors. Impact-resistant, these Olympic Plates will not split, crack or peel. They are also impervious to rusting, chipping, flaking or losing their color. And the integrated metal sleeve provides a smooth, secure fit onto any Olympic bar. Heavy lifting has never been easier or safer. U.S. Pat. No. 5,137,502 under license from Iron Grip Barbell Company, Inc.

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